Faculty of Law of Paris

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Faculty_of_Law_of_Paris an entity of type: Thing

كلية الحقوق في باريس (بالإنجليزية: Paris Law Faculty)‏ هي كلية، تأسست في 31 ديسمبر 1970، في فرنسا. rdf:langString
L'École de droit de Paris, dit aussi Centre Panthéon, est un bâtiment du 5e arrondissement de Paris, situé au 12, place du Panthéon, abritant actuellement les présidences des universités Panthéon-Sorbonne et Panthéon-Assas, ainsi que le Collège et École de droit de Paris II et l'École de droit de la Sorbonne. Il a été conçu par l'architecte Jacques-Germain Soufflot entre 1771 et 1773. Il est depuis le 6 janvier 1926 inscrit aux monuments historiques. rdf:langString
The Faculty of Law of Paris (French: Faculté de droit de Paris), called from the late 1950s to 1970 the Faculty of Law and Economics of Paris, is the second-oldest faculty of law in the world and one of the four and eventually five faculties of the University of Paris ("the Sorbonne"), from the 12th century until 1970. rdf:langString
La Facultad de derecho de París es una facultad de derecho cuyo origen se remonta al XII XII siglo y que entonces se llamaba la Facultad de Decreto fue una de las cuatro facultades de la Antigua Universidad de París . En 1679, se convirtió en la "Facultad de Derecho Civil y Canónico », siendo cerrada en 1793 durante la Revolución Francesa. En 1802 se reabrió como "Facultad de Derecho de París", en 1808 se convirtió en « Nueva Facultad de Derecho en París". De 1896 a 1870, se agrupó en la Universidad de París y luego se dividió en 1970 entre las universidades de París-I, París-II, París-IX, París-X, París-XII y París-XIII. rdf:langString
La faculté de droit de Paris dont l'origine remonte au XIIe siècle et qui était alors appelée la Faculté de décret était l'une des quatre facultés de l'Ancienne université de Paris. Devenue en 1679 la « Faculté de droit civil et canonique » elle est fermée en 1793 lors de la Révolution française. Recréée en 1802 sous le nom de « École de droit de Paris », elle devient en 1808 la « Nouvelle faculté de droit de Paris ». De 1896 à 1870, elle est regroupée dans l'Université de Paris puis est répartie en 1970 entre les universités Paris-I, Paris-II, Paris-IX, Paris-X, Paris-XII et Paris-XIII. rdf:langString
La Faculté de droit de Paris (facoltà di diritto) fu una delle quattro o forse cinque facoltà dell'Università di Parigi, chiamata "Sorbona", da circa il 1150-1200 fino al 1970. I suoi due edifici principali si trovavano in piazza del Panthéon e in rue d’Assas. Nel 1802 fu riaperta la facoltà di giurisprudenza e fu chiamata "L'École de droit de Paris" ("Scuola di diritto di Parigi"). Nel 1896, la facoltà di giurisprudenza e le altre quattro facoltà parigine furono raggruppate insieme per ricreare l'Università di Parigi. Alla fine degli anni 1950 divenne una "facoltà di diritto ed economia". rdf:langString
rdf:langString Faculty of Law of Paris
rdf:langString كلية الحقوق في باريس
rdf:langString Facultad de Derecho de París
rdf:langString École de droit de Paris
rdf:langString Faculté de droit de Paris
rdf:langString Faculté de droit de Paris
rdf:langString Faculty of Law of Paris
rdf:langString Faculty of Law of Paris
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rdf:langString Aristide Briand, prime minister, Nobel Peace Prize 1926
rdf:langString Raphaël Salem, Greek mathematician whose name gave the Salem numbers, the Salem–Spencer sets and the Salem Prize
rdf:langString Saint Ivo, patron of the lawyers and of abandoned children, "Advocate of the Poor"
rdf:langString Émile Acollas, one of the founders of the League of Peace and Freedom
rdf:langString Sarmiza Bilcescu, first female student in law of France, first PhD in law of France
rdf:langString Alain-René Lesage, author of Gil Blas
rdf:langString Dariush Safvat, music master
rdf:langString Gustave Boissonade, builder of the Japanese Civil Law during the Meiji Era
rdf:langString Marcel Proust, author of In Search of Lost Time
rdf:langString Voltaire, author of the French Enlightenment
rdf:langString Jean le Rond d'Alembert, mathematician, physicist and philosopher
rdf:langString Honoré de Balzac, author of La Comédie Humaine series
rdf:langString Shapour Bakhtiar, last prime minister of Iran before the Islamic Republic, assassinated in 1991
rdf:langString Claude Lévi-Strauss, "father of modern anthropology"
rdf:langString Marius Pontmercy, fictional lawyer, from Les Misérables
rdf:langString Olga Petit, first woman to take the oath to become barrister in France
rdf:langString Henri Donnedieu de Vabres, French judge at the Nuremberg trials
rdf:langString Nicolas Boileau, one of the builders of French poetry
rdf:langString Denis Diderot, co-creator with d'Alembert of the Encyclopédie
rdf:langString Alexis de Tocqueville, author of Democracy in America
rdf:langString Louis Leblois, magistrate and lawyer of Alfred Dreyfus
rdf:langString Tcheng Yu-hsiu, first female lawyer and judge in Chinese history
rdf:langString Jeanne Chauvin, first woman to lead at the bar in France
rdf:langString Francois Denis Tronchet, president of the commission for the creation of the French Civil Code and lawyer of Louis XVI of France at his trial
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rdf:langString Nicolas Fouquet, Superintendent of Finances under King Louis XIV
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rdf:langString Alumni of the Paris Law Faculty: French Enlightment
rdf:langString Alumni of the Paris Law Faculty: Prominent intellectuals
rdf:langString Alumni of the Paris Law Faculty: Judiciary and lawyers
rdf:langString Alumni of the Paris Law Faculty: Classical Ages
rdf:langString Alumni of the Paris Law Faculty: Women and the law
rdf:langString Alumni of the Paris Law Faculty: Literature, arts and other sciences
rdf:langString Alumni of the Paris Law Faculty: French and World Politics
rdf:langString President Mitterand bij slotzitting Europa Congres Mitterand, kop, Bestanddeelnr 934-2444 .jpg
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rdf:langString كلية الحقوق في باريس (بالإنجليزية: Paris Law Faculty)‏ هي كلية، تأسست في 31 ديسمبر 1970، في فرنسا.
rdf:langString The Faculty of Law of Paris (French: Faculté de droit de Paris), called from the late 1950s to 1970 the Faculty of Law and Economics of Paris, is the second-oldest faculty of law in the world and one of the four and eventually five faculties of the University of Paris ("the Sorbonne"), from the 12th century until 1970. During the Middle Ages, it was, with the faculty of law of the University of Bologna, the oldest one, one of the two most important faculties of law in the world. Pierre Abélard, founder of modern law, was its precursor, as a teacher at the cathedral school of Notre-Dame de Paris, Andrea Alciato, founder of legal humanism, was a professor there, and Saint Ivo, patron of lawyers and "Advocate of the Poor" according to the Catholic Church, had studied there. The prohibition by the Pope of teaching of Roman Law limited, however, its growth, to the benefit of the nearby University of Orléans, where numerous important French people studied law. In 1679, King Louis authorized the teaching of Roman Law. Numerous French intellectuals and revolutionary, like Voltaire, Diderot and d'Alembert, Robespierre, etc. studied there. Between the French Revolution and its dissolution in 1970, numerous important people in France and in the world taught or studied there, including Victor Hugo, Claude Lévi-Strauss, Tocqueville, and Honoré de Balzac. The faculty of law is also mentioned in classical French literature, in particular in Les Misérables. At the dissolution of the Sorbonne in 1970, its two main buildings were place du Panthéon and rue d’Assas. Most of its law professors (88 out of 108) decided to perpetuate the faculty of law and economics by creating and joining a university of law offering the same programs within the same two buildings; therefore, they created the "University of Law, Economics and Social Sciences of Paris", now called Panthéon-Assas University.
rdf:langString L'École de droit de Paris, dit aussi Centre Panthéon, est un bâtiment du 5e arrondissement de Paris, situé au 12, place du Panthéon, abritant actuellement les présidences des universités Panthéon-Sorbonne et Panthéon-Assas, ainsi que le Collège et École de droit de Paris II et l'École de droit de la Sorbonne. Il a été conçu par l'architecte Jacques-Germain Soufflot entre 1771 et 1773. Il est depuis le 6 janvier 1926 inscrit aux monuments historiques.
rdf:langString La Facultad de derecho de París es una facultad de derecho cuyo origen se remonta al XII XII siglo y que entonces se llamaba la Facultad de Decreto fue una de las cuatro facultades de la Antigua Universidad de París . En 1679, se convirtió en la "Facultad de Derecho Civil y Canónico », siendo cerrada en 1793 durante la Revolución Francesa. En 1802 se reabrió como "Facultad de Derecho de París", en 1808 se convirtió en « Nueva Facultad de Derecho en París". De 1896 a 1870, se agrupó en la Universidad de París y luego se dividió en 1970 entre las universidades de París-I, París-II, París-IX, París-X, París-XII y París-XIII. El edificio histórico construido en 1771 en la Place du Panthéon para albergarla es hoy compartido entre la Universidad de París 1 y la Universidad de París 2.
rdf:langString La faculté de droit de Paris dont l'origine remonte au XIIe siècle et qui était alors appelée la Faculté de décret était l'une des quatre facultés de l'Ancienne université de Paris. Devenue en 1679 la « Faculté de droit civil et canonique » elle est fermée en 1793 lors de la Révolution française. Recréée en 1802 sous le nom de « École de droit de Paris », elle devient en 1808 la « Nouvelle faculté de droit de Paris ». De 1896 à 1870, elle est regroupée dans l'Université de Paris puis est répartie en 1970 entre les universités Paris-I, Paris-II, Paris-IX, Paris-X, Paris-XII et Paris-XIII. Le bâtiment historique construit en 1771 place du Panthéon pour l'abriter est aujourd'hui partagé entre l'université Paris 1 et l'université Paris 2.
rdf:langString La Faculté de droit de Paris (facoltà di diritto) fu una delle quattro o forse cinque facoltà dell'Università di Parigi, chiamata "Sorbona", da circa il 1150-1200 fino al 1970. I suoi due edifici principali si trovavano in piazza del Panthéon e in rue d’Assas. Fino al XIX secolo, la facoltà di diritto di Parigi era chiamata "Faculté de décret" o "Consultissima decretorum". Dopo che l'editto di Saint-Germain-en-Laye dell'aprile 1679 ristabilì l'insegnamento del diritto romano a Parigi (che era stato proibito dal 1223 dal decretale Super Specula), la facoltà era nota come "facoltà di diritto civile e canonico". Fu chiusa, insieme ad altre facoltà, il 15 settembre 1793, durante la rivoluzione francese. Nel 1802 fu riaperta la facoltà di giurisprudenza e fu chiamata "L'École de droit de Paris" ("Scuola di diritto di Parigi"). Nel 1896, la facoltà di giurisprudenza e le altre quattro facoltà parigine furono raggruppate insieme per ricreare l'Università di Parigi. Alla fine degli anni 1950 divenne una "facoltà di diritto ed economia". A seguito degli eventi del maggio 1968, le facoltà dell'unità di Parigi divennero università indipendenti La maggior parte dei professori di legge decisero di perpetuare la facoltà di legge ed economia e crearono l'Università Panthéon-Assas ma alcuni passarono a università interdisciplinari come l'Università Pantheon-Sorbona, la Paris V: René Descartes e l'Università Paris-Est Créteil Val-de-Marne.
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